New Delhi:India is right in demanding a "major course correction" of the UN Security Council when the world's largest democracy is kept out of the global decision-making, the country's UN envoy has said.
India has been at the forefront of the years-long efforts to reform the Security Council, saying it rightly deserved a place as a permanent member of the United Nations. Currently, the UNSC has five permanent members - China, France, Russia, the UK and the US. Only a permanent member has the power to veto any substantive resolution.
"India was a founding signatory to the UN Charter when it was signed on June 26, 1945, in San Francisco. Seventy-seven years later, when we see the world's largest democracy, along with entire continents of Africa and Latin America, being kept out of global decision making, we rightly call for a major course correction," India's Permanent Representative to the UN Ambassador Ruchira Kamboj said in the UN Security Council on Monday.
She was addressing the Security Council's open debate on 'Effective Multilateralism through the Defense of the Principles of UN Charter' held under the Council Presidency of permanent member Russia. She said even as effective multilateralism should prevail, "we are collectively aware of the inadequacies of the multilateral system that has failed to respond to contemporary challenges, whether it be the Covid-19 pandemic or the ongoing conflict in Ukraine."
"Moreover, significant global challenges such as terrorism, radicalism, climate justice and climate action, disruptive non-state actors, debt and several geopolitical contestations continue to undermine global peace and security," Kamboj said. She outlined three pressing questions which she said the debate should address. India questioned whether "effective multilateralism" can be practised by defending a charter that "makes five nations more equal than others and provides to each of those five the power to ignore the collective will of the remaining 188 member states", referring to the remaining membership in the 193-nation UN.
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Kamboj was referring to the five permanent members of the Security Council. She asserted that the "starting premise" has to be widening the representation of the core institution of the Security Council to more developing countries for its effectiveness and credibility. "If we continue to perpetuate the 1945 anachronistic mindset, we will continue to lose the faith our people have in the United Nations," she said.
"Can we actually promote 'effective multilateralism' through defending a UN Charter where two of the permanent members have not been able to get even their names changed?" she asked, in a reference to China and Russia. In the UN Charter, 'The Republic of China' is still used as the name for China, now officially known as The People's Republic of China while the former nomenclature "the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics" is used for Russia.